Modern Magick 4, The Fifth Britain, was a really quick read. I had to go back and see if it was shorter than the other Modern Magick books; nope: I just plowed through it super quick because it was so engrossing.
It begins with the heroes (Ves, Jay, and Zareen), suitably bedraggled from their outcast-ness. This book has more character development of Zareen, a good deal more of the handsome Baron (who, although sexy, definitely begins to appear a bit less altruistic than previously), and a lot more hauntings. In fact, there's a whole community of ghosts with extreme powers, bizarre personalities, and definitive opinions.
The mysteries in the 4th Modern Magick deepen deliciously, along with a lot of interesting new information. There is a real lack of Milady's chocolate, sadly for all involved. However I did research chocolate pots and learned that historically hot chocolate used to be made in the pot itself, full of spices and the actual cocoa beans (with the cocoa butter still on it, and not separated), and then stirred with a stirrer that came up through a hole in the lid of the chocolate pot. Search for images!
And Ves is summed up superbly: " 'The trouble with you, Ves, isn't that you're amoral. You aren't. It's that, for all your flower-coloured hair and your trinkets and your jewels, you're too dammed practical. The rest of us will wrestle with the rules and the ethics and the precedents and the expectations surrounding a given course of action for some time, before concluding, regretfully, that there aren't any other options that would get the job done nearly so well, or even at all. You go through the same process in three seconds flat...' "
I enjoyed this book more than the 3rd one. The entire Modern Magick series remains a whimsical, dark breath of fresh air, complete with sinister undertones and the characteristic snarky, observant voice of Ves. This book was no exception.